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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 24, 2023

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Consultants make that much about 7-8 years into training, after 4 years of med school and 2 years in the Foundation program. From my understanding, hanging around on subs for British doctors for several years, people feel shafted when they can quite easily emigrate to other Commonwealth countries and make a great deal more, while also dealing with less antisocial hours, more time off, and coverage of the thousands of pounds in fees for mandatory exams needed for career progression. No faffing about being chucked from one end of the deanery to another to boot.

In addition, the perception is that they could have made far more money at the entry level and above by going into something like finance instead of medicine, which I'm given to understand is the one domain in the UK that makes a decent chunk of dough.

In addition, the Government as a monopsony employer has enforced sub-inflation pay raises for over a decade, while resisting pay restoration efforts, leading to the recent strikes. Further, doctors can make a great deal more outside the NHS working for private hospitals, with the only reason to work in the NHS being that your career progression hinges on it. Once again, the monopsony employer suppressing wages..

And of course, wages for entry level doctors in the UK are abysmal, especially given the amount of time spent in training and their responsibilites. A PA can make 45-50k while having fewer responsibilities than an FY2, the latter making around 35k. They can't even prescribe!

As such, a great number of the locals are fleeing to fairer shores, and being replaced by IMGs like yours truly.

Consultants make that much about 7-8 years into training

You aren't doing yourself any favors by comparing yourself to the 1 well-compensated profession that even practitioners themselves will admit is a scam.

I don't really see why you'd think doctors are evil really

I do it because it is provocative. The main point alludes to the eternal tradeoff between protecting your paycheck and doing good in the world. Doctors are ideal bait, because it is the one profession which has an air of selflessness, and sets implicit expectations of reverence from the common man.

US doctors are far more professionally organized and cartel-like

Agreed. My fellow Indians doctors do not seem to enjoying the same luxuries as American doctors. If anything, being a doctor in India sounds like the worst of both worlds.

You aren't doing yourself any favors by comparing yourself to the 1 well-compensated profession that even practitioners themselves will admit is a scam.

I think you may have misread that - consultant doctors =/= management consultants. A "consultant" in medicine referrers to a specialist who has completed training.

I'm only conveying what I've heard from lurking around, given that they're in the midst of industrial action, I suppose they're hyping themselves up as much as feasible.

The bigger issue is a massive decrease in QOL of doctors in living memory. They need a ~40% pay raise to restore their pay to 2008 levels after adjusting for inflation, for the same amount of work. That's on top of dealing with crap that doctors from other countries largely don't worry about, like rotational training making it very hard to buy a house or maintain a relationship.

I think any set of doctors would be pissed if they saw their wages being chipped away at that pace, and it's not a historical phenomenon, it's well within living memory. That's leaving aside how much less respect they get compared to their foreign peers, especially with a nominally flat hierarchy of all health workers. I've read about nurses making comments to junior doctors without issue that would have had them chewed up anywhere else.

Still, the UK has a great deal further to fall before it becomes worse than living in India, so it's a largely moot point from my perspective. If I get some rather distressing bureaucratic issues dealt with, I myself might CCT and flee, but that's assuming a business as usual economy, which it very much isn't going to be. At that point, simply tolerating that shit till I have citizenship in hand, something far more valuable than wages at that point.

The bigger issue is a massive decrease in QOL of doctors in living memory.

Yeah... every once in a while I wonder how does anyone still want to be a doctor. I probably couldn't do the job even if I wanted to, and even if I could, the responsibility sound nerve-wrecking, and the compensation just doesn't seem worth it.

people feel shafted when they can quite easily emigrate to other Commonwealth countries and make a great deal more,

~$200K CAD would AFAIK be pretty normal for a Canadian GP who doesn't run appointments factory-style, unless things have drastically changed in the past few years. Specialists do make more, and some GPs run checkup mills which can be quite lucrative (as they are compensated per visit) but seems stressful to me -- I don't know that they make "a great deal more" $100k sterling equivalent though.

And a software developer in UK makes less about 40k after 3-5 years of uni and a couple of years of work. A senior developer with who knows how many years of additional training makes about 50.

Doctors are extremely well compensated and have unparalleled employment security.

It's probably true that people can emigrate to get higher salaries but that is even more true of other professions.